
This weekend’s Eucharist in St Columba’s, Brora, will start at 3pm on Sunday 22nd January, an hour earlier than the usual 4pm.
All are welcome.

This weekend’s Eucharist in St Columba’s, Brora, will start at 3pm on Sunday 22nd January, an hour earlier than the usual 4pm.
All are welcome.

The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity is traditionally observed from the 18th to the 25th January – the octave of St. Peter and St. Paul. It is also customary to have at least one service to which Christians from all Churches and Fellowships are invited.
Accordingly there will be a service in St Andrew’s Church in Tain at 3pm on Wednesday 25th January.
For this Week of Prayer for Christian Unity we are guided by the churches of Minneapolis as we seek to explore how the work of Christian unity can contribute to the promotion of racial justice across all levels of society. Through this resource, the CTBI writers’ group has also focussed our attention on the 30th anniversary of the murder of Stephen Lawrence, which falls this year. The work of restoring hope through justice undertaken in Stephen’s memory continues to inspire and change lives for the better.

As we join with other Christians around the world for the Week of Prayer we pray that our hearts will be open to see and hear the many ways in which racism continues to destroy lives, and to discern the steps we can take as individuals and communities to heal the hurts and build a better future for everyone.


Malcolm Guite wrote this lovely sonnet to mark the Feast of the Naming of Jesus:
I name you now, from whom all names derive
Malcolm Guite – From his collection “Parable and Paradox” published by Canterbury Press
Who uttered forth the name of everything,
And in that naming made the world alive,
Sprung from the breath and essence of your being.
The very Word that gave us words to speak,
You drank in language with your mother’s milk
And learned through touch before you learned to talk,
You wove our week-day world, and still one week
Within that world, you took your saving name,
A given name, the gift of that good angel,
Whose Gospel breathes in good news for us all.
We call your name that we might hear a call
That carries from your cradle to our graves
Yeshua, Living Jesus, Yahweh Saves.


A Service of Lessons and Carols
for Christmas
St. Andrew’s Scottish Episcopal Church
Glebe Crescent, Tain
FRIDAY 23rd December
3pm

Followed by Mulled Wine, mince pies & other seasonal refreshments
EVERYONE WELCOME

Our Service Times vary a little from usual on Remembrance Sunday:
Dornoch – there is a parade from Cathedral Square at 10:30, followed by a service and Act of Remembrance at the War Memorial. St Finnbarr’s service will therefore start at approximately 11:30am.
Tain – The service at St Andrew’s will start promptly at 10:50 with an Act of Remembrance and two minute silence at 11am, followed by the usual Eucharist. James will lead prayers at the Wreath Laying Ceremony at the Tain Collegiate Church at 12:15pm.
Lairg – There will be a service at the War Memorial at 10:45am, followed by a Church of Scotland service in the Parish Church.
Brora – There will be a Service of Remembrance at St Columba’s at 4pm.


Today is All Souls day, a day when in some parts of Christianity the living pray for the dead and specifically those that we have loved but see no more. Throughout the world there are many traditions associated with this day, though it probably observed less in ‘Reformed Christianity’ in the West.
There are references to prayer for the dead in a number of Books of the Bible, including: 2 Maccabees, Zechariah, Sirach, and the Gospel of Matthew. Reacting against flagrant abuses in the Church, when Martin Luther translated the Bible into German, he omitted the seven books of the canon which refer to prayers for the dead (except interestingly Matthew’s Gospel). He then introduced the doctrine that people are simply saved, or not, and argued that there is no need to pray for the dead to get them into heaven.
“Judas and his men went to take up the bodies of the fallen and to bring them back to lie with their kindred in the sepulchres of their ancestors….They turned to supplication, praying that the sin that had been committed might be wholly blotted out.… therefore they made atonement for the dead, so that they might be delivered from their sin..“
2 Maccabees 12:39, 42,45
All Souls Day is celebrated in much of the western world on 2nd November. The Eastern Orthodox Church has several such days throughout the year, mostly on Saturdays.
Different cultures mark the day differently. In North America, Americans may say prayers or light candles for the departed. In parts of Latin America, families visit the graves of their ancestors and sometimes leave food offerings for the departed. The Mexican traditions surrounding this day are probably the most widely known. They celebrate the day as “El Dia de Los Muertos” (“The Day of the Dead”). Today they traditionally visit graveyards and have a picnic and leave food out for their dead relatives who are on their journey to heaven.
Here in this part of Christendom, we mark the day with a special Eucharist, when we pray for the dead and read out a list of names of the friends, relatives and members of our congregations who have died, both recently and also in former years. Many of us find this a very moving experience.
“Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight and the sin that clings so closely, and let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us“
Hebrews 12:1
We generally have just one service which alternates between St Finnbarr’s and St Andrew’s, but we read the names of those provided by members of all our congregations and drawn from our Registers.
This year, the service is as follows:

“Eternal Rest grant unto them, O Lord,
and let perpetual light shine upon them.
May they rest in peace.”

This Sunday is the fifth Sunday of the month and there will be services as follows:
There will be no service in Brora this week.

This Sunday (9th October) our 11am Eucharist will be a joint service in St Finnbarr’s Dornoch.
There will be services as follows:
There will be no 11am Eucharist Service in Tain this week.

